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Meals on wheels: are robot waiters going to take over from humans? Many restaurant owners see them as the answer to labour shortages

  • In the US, a robot server costs US$15,000 to buy, while a human server costs between US$5,000 and US$6,000 a month, and takes days off
  • There are now tens of thousands of robot waiters in service worldwide, and that number will only grow, observers of the food and beverage industry say

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A robot waiter serves food at a Las Vegas convention centre. Robot waiters are becoming more popular with restaurant owners worldwide, although some observers believe they are still just a gimmick. Photo: Getty Images

You may already have seen them in restaurants: waist-high machines that can greet guests, lead them to their tables, deliver food and drinks and ferry dirty dishes to the kitchen. Some have catlike faces and even purr when you scratch their heads.

But are robot waiters the future?

Many think robot waiters are the solution to the industry’s labour shortages. Sales have been growing rapidly in recent years, with tens of thousands now gliding through dining rooms worldwide.

“There’s no doubt in my mind that this is where the world is going,” says Dennis Reynolds, dean of the Hilton College of Global Hospitality Leadership at the University of Houston in the US state of Texas.

A robot server with a cat’s face is loaded with plates at the Celenus Teufelsbad specialist clinic in Blankenburg, Germany. Photo: Getty Images
A robot server with a cat’s face is loaded with plates at the Celenus Teufelsbad specialist clinic in Blankenburg, Germany. Photo: Getty Images

The school’s restaurant began using a robot in December, and Reynolds says it has eased the workload for human staff and made service more efficient.

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